Wednesday, June 4, 2003
Center on Contemporary
Art, Seattle, WA
Seattle-based sound sculptor, composer and inventor Trimpin
will be talking about a topic he'll divulge when he's back
in town next week. For more about Trimpin, see, http://www.otherminds.org/shtml/Trimpin.shtml.
Chris McMullen, ‘Aesthetic Movement’: Tacoma-based
kinetic sculptor Chris McMullen will be running two of his
loud, large, elegantly austere machines and talking about
aesthetic movement: “there is movement all around us, every
day, everywhere we go. from cars driving by, to cranes lifting
material, to cargo ships coming in to port. most of which
we take for granted, because it is normal everyday life.
if you ever stop to look and take in what is happening around
you, you may see the beauty in the mundane movements from
here to there. inspired by industry, and machinery of all
sorts, my work seeks to show the beauty of movement in simple
actions, such as a hammer swing.”.
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Maribeth Back, ‘Experiments in the Future of
Reading’: one-time Seattle resident and now-Berkeley,
CA-based researcher and designer Maribeth Back http://xenia.media.mit.edu/~mbb/
will be talking about her work in the field of multi-sensory
design and the intersection of technology with reading:
“The Listen Reader is a personal interactive reading experience
that combines the look and feel of a real book - a beautiful
cover, paper pages and printed images and text - with the
rich, evocative quality of a movie soundtrack. It is designed
to preserve and even heighten the experience of immersive
reading. It explores the idea of multi-sensory reading:
the use of background sound to provide a sense of place,
and to add affect to the experience of reading a book without
interrupting the flow of the story. The Listen Reader also
preserves the beauty of the book as token object, embedded
in a classic immersive reading environment: a comfortable
chair, a polished hardwood swing-arm reading stand, a pool
of light in an otherwise shadowed corner. The soundtrack
is controlled by the motion of the reader's hands above
the page; any motion within eight inches of the sensors
is read as a volume, pitch, or pan control. Embedded RFID
tags were used to sense the page looked at, and capacitive
field sensors measure human proximity to the pages. Proximity
measurements control volume and other expressive parameters
of the sounds associated with each page.”.
Speeder Reader provides speed reading with speed racing
controls, combining dynamic typography with a driving interface.
A speed-reading protocol called RSVP (for Rapid Serial Visual
Presentation) can allow people to learn to read up to 2000
words per minute. In Speeder Reader, a gas pedal controls
the rate of speed-reading and a steering wheel navigates
between streams of text. Speeder Reader is designed not
only to illustrate a different method of text reading, but
to provide a metaphor about personal control over the powerful
medium of text: driving is a enabling tool for people in
our culture.
Call for musicians, djs:
If you’d like to spin, make or play music after the presentation,
please let Kate
or Kathy know.
Join us for beer, music, conversation and mingling
after the speakers have spoken – this is the very first
dorkbot-sea meeting, and we’d like to kick things off in
style. We’re looking forward to seeing you there!
Chris McMullen, originally from
reno, nevada, moved to seattle in 1999. background in graphic
communication, and animation. started building sculpture
in 1997, was previously interested in screen printing, drawing,
painting, and computer graphics. has been building and showing
large scale kinetic sculpture around the seattle area for
the last four years.
Maribeth Back is a researcher and designer who
builds and writes about real-world, socially informed exploratory
applications for new technologies. She is especially interested
in multi-sensory design: the practical integration of visual,
sonic and haptic content with physical form and social context.
As a senior research scientist at Xerox PARC (1996 - 2002),
she worked with the RED group exploring emerging technologies.
Her research included experimental augmented books, novel
designs and sensor systems for wireless mobile interaction,
physical computing, and audio systems for virtual and augmented
realities.
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